Thursday, May 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Privacy watchdog finds thousands of tax account breaches, urges stronger protections

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2026 09:03 AM
  • Privacy watchdog finds thousands of tax account breaches, urges stronger protections

The federal privacy watchdog says there have been more than 42,000 breaches at the Canada Revenue Agency since 2020 as a result of people gaining unauthorized access to, or modifying, taxpayer information.

In a special report tabled in Parliament, privacy commissioner Philippe Dufresne points to gaps in the revenue agency's prevention, monitoring, detection and handling of breaches.

Dufresne found the agency couldn't provide details of every confirmed breach due to limitations in its tracking systems and the overall volume of incidents.

The commissioner's office says the agency did not implement mandatory multi-factor authentication — a means of helping people bolster account security — in a timely manner and did not consistently rely on methods considered to be best practices.

It also says the agency could not always adequately explain how attackers managed to bypass authentication processes.

The commissioner made nine recommendations for improvement, eight of which were accepted in full and one in part by the revenue agency.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Global Affairs staff exempt from return-to-office order due to lack of space

Global Affairs staff exempt from return-to-office order due to lack of space
Most employees working at Global Affairs Canada won't have to return to the office four days a week this summer due to a lack of space.

Global Affairs staff exempt from return-to-office order due to lack of space

Canada called on to fill 'vacuum' in LGBTQ+ advocacy worldwide in face of Trump cuts

Canada called on to fill 'vacuum' in LGBTQ+ advocacy worldwide in face of Trump cuts
The former U.S. diplomat for LGBTQ+ rights is urging Canada to boost its support for gender and sexual minorities abroad — and South Africa says Ottawa can help hold the line against the Trump administration's efforts to erode human rights globally.

Canada called on to fill 'vacuum' in LGBTQ+ advocacy worldwide in face of Trump cuts

10 properties under evacuation alert due to nearby wildfire in B.C.

10 properties under evacuation alert due to nearby wildfire in B.C.
An evacuation alert has been issued in British Columbia's Cariboo region for a handful of properties as a wildfire burns out of control at the start of the province's wildfire season.

10 properties under evacuation alert due to nearby wildfire in B.C.

Former RCMP officer's lawyer calls no evidence in B.C. trial over security charge

Former RCMP officer's lawyer calls no evidence in B.C. trial over security charge
Former RCMP officer William Majcher says he wants to get back home to his family and hopes for a not guilty finding on a charge alleging he prepared to threaten a B.C. resident to convince him to return to China. 

Former RCMP officer's lawyer calls no evidence in B.C. trial over security charge

Remembering the 11 who lost their lives in Lapu Lapu attack, one year ago

Remembering the 11 who lost their lives in Lapu Lapu attack, one year ago
Eleven people were killed in the April 26, 2025, attack on the Lapu Lapu Day festival in East Vancouver, with dozens more injured.

Remembering the 11 who lost their lives in Lapu Lapu attack, one year ago

Carney says tariffs 'more than irritants' as U.S. officials complain about booze ban

Carney says tariffs 'more than irritants' as U.S. officials complain about booze ban
Canada is not just sitting back "taking notes" or "instructions" from the Americans on how to go about trade talks after White House officials complained publicly about trade irritants, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday.

Carney says tariffs 'more than irritants' as U.S. officials complain about booze ban